All articles by Emma Stoye – Page 29
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Research
Sulfur chemistry links coral to climate
Destruction of the world's coral reefs could result in fewer clouds and contribute to warming
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Feature
Models of success
The 2013 Nobel prize in chemistry was for combining quantum and classical mechanics, as Emma Stoye discovers
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News
Computational chemists take Nobel prize
‘Secret handshake’ that joined up quantum physics with classical molecular mechanics grabs science’s top gong
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Business
Japan confirms Novartis clinical trial data fabrication
Investigation into blood pressure blockbuster continues
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Feature
Colouring in the dinosaur book
Chemists are helping palaeontologists discover the rich palette of pigments in fossils, as Emma Stoye discovers
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News
Spicing up water purification
Coriander leaves can be useful for more than just curries, find undergraduate students
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News
Call to overhaul liver toxicity testing
Outdated tests could be causing drug candidates to be scrapped without reason, say scientists
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News
Mosquito repellents from skin secretions
The smell of people who don’t get bitten by mosquitoes so often might help those of us that do
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Research
Water-splitting catalyst based on Prussian blue
Cobalt-based derivative catalyses oxidation of water
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Research
Raman-based imaging takes guesswork out of brain surgery
New technique analyses brain cell chemistry to boost the chances of successful tumour removal
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Research
Cracked bones attract healing nanoparticles
Ion gradients can be used to guide drug-loaded nanoparticles to where they are needed
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Business
Endo Health to buy Boca Pharmacal for $225m
Endo agrees to buy generics firm Boca as two major patents expire
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Business
Couple charged in GSK corruption investigation
Two private investigators have been charged with breaching the privacy rights of Chinese citizens
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Research
US rivers turned alkaline by acid rain
Two thirds of rivers in the eastern US have become alkaline in recent decades
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News
Half of all papers from 2011 are open access
Report’s author claims movement has reached a critical mass with nearly twice as many papers freely accessible as previously thought
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Research
Squid skin material invisible to infrared cameras
Cephalopod-inspired surface can tune its reflectivity using chemical stimuli
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News
France expands investment in nanotechnology
Prime minister pledges €600 million for five-year R&D program